The Nietzsche Commentary Research Center mourns the loss of its founder and long-time director

PROF. DR. JOCHEN SCHMIDT (internal link)

who passed away on May 18, 2020, at the age of 81.

Jochen Schmidt not only founded the Nietzsche-Kommentar publishing house, led it until 2014, and actively supported it until very recently, but also set new standards in international Nietzsche scholarship with his own commentaries on *The Birth of Tragedy* and *The Dawn*. He was an exceptionally kind-hearted supervisor, colleague, doyen, and friend who knew how to motivate and inspire us in countless ways. Jochen Schmidt will remain a great role model for us, both personally and academically.

Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900) is arguably the most influential German-language author of the modern era on an international scale. An almost overwhelming flood of publications has been devoted to his work, which has had a global impact not only on philosophical discourse but also on literature, art, anthropology, psychology, theology, politics, and popular culture, among other fields.

This makes it all the more surprising that no comprehensive commentary on his writings has been published to date. The supplementary volumes of the Critical Complete Edition of Nietzsche’s Works by Giorgio Colli and Mazzino Montinari remain—due to their focus on textual criticism—deliberately restrained in their commentary. The Nietzsche Commentary addresses this gap, primarily for the writings published during his lifetime or intended for publication, and thereby lays the groundwork for the commentary on his posthumous works—which are of great significance in terms of their historical impact—a task that is equally urgent in the long term.